New Look Law

The legal sector is steeped in strict tradition, but process changes are emerging, and law firms throughout the world are adopting new design principles in order to adapt, keep up, and stay ahead. DLA Piper Australia has relied on design to help to evolve its workplace objectives, and has worked closely with Woods Bagot on the rethinking of its Sydney, Melbourne and – most recently – its Brisbane offices.

For DLA Piper’s Brisbane home, Woods Bagot imagined a collegiate workplace environment to encourage collaboration and foster ease of connection between clients and colleagues alike. Workspace support a balance between both focused work and increased connection. The work spaces have been designed to accommodate the changing nature of legal work, staff agility and integrated technology. The result is warm and relaxed, like a fashionable hotel lobby – a welcome change to the typically stern, austere or traditional look of many chambers.

Woods Bagot interiors Sector Leader in Brisbane, Sally Macnaughton said the firm had transitioned towards a forward-thinking learning landscape that blends confidentiality with flexibility and efficiency.

“DLA Piper is already aware of the changing nature of legal practice and understand the effect space can have on supporting and achieving their objectives,” Macnaughton explains. “One of their key principles is to create a ‘learning landscape’. The design response to this requirement included an open plan environment which allowed senior staff to be embedded within their teams but with sufficient and proximate support spaces to allow for ease of movement from mentoring to concentrated or confidential work.”

“Another key example was the response to changing ratios of support staff. The design changed the process to enable consolidation of support teams into two hubs which were located within the legal teams. This shared resource was more accessible and easily located, grouped around a shared bench under a ceiling feature which aided to break up the large floor plates into more human-scale neighbourhoods.”

The fit-out includes spaces that are new to the Brisbane DLA Piper team – open collaborative settings, workspaces that range in height and informality, as well as a much greater level of integrated technology to support ease of connection to other DLA Piper offices globally. The space also allows for continued change and long term flexibility. “While reliance on hard copy files is reducing, it remains part of most legal practices today. Over the life of the lease this is likely to change,” says Macnaughton. “The design of the work settings and storage facilities ensures that as hard copy files reduce, the space currently occupied by storage will be able to be repurposed, allowing for reconfiguration to respond to team and work style demands.”